Endymion wrote:
> Tiny Human Ferret wrote:
>
>
>>So... this guy was representing himself as head Goth of
>>Richmond VA, or what?
>
>
> I expect that community was just his own little
> meet-and-greet-the-teen-crowd project that never went anywhere because
> everyone was reading the real LJ community for the Richmond scene at
> http://www.livejournal.com/community/rvagoth/.
>
> The community I was talking about is the general interest RVa one at
> http://www.livejournal.com/community/rva/.
Thanks very much.
On last night's "Dateline" there was a half-hour segment which I taped
and which I'll be reviewing.
One thing stuck out like a sore thumb, and this was stated by Richmond
PD's Capt Rodney Monroe, who used to be a very high-ranking officer with
the Wa****ngton DC Metropolitan Police Department. He said something to
the effect of "this reminded me as chillingly similar to the Chandra
Levi disappearance".
Some of the "Dateline" interviews with local Richmond Goths indicated
that Fawley had a long history of stalking behaviour.
Behl's car being found, abandoned, with out-of-state tags on it, as well
as Fawley's alleged collection of motor-vehicle tags, points to a
possible history of as-yet-undiscovered similar fake tagging of stolen
vehicles. Of course this all is highly speculative but possibly worth
pursuing and probably is being pursued.
Back to Chandra Levi, and similar worrisome disappearances in the
District. These include an INS attorney who vanished pretty much from
plain sight in a crowded park, DC's Dupont Circle Park, who was later
found in a highly decomposed state in a tidal backwater of the Potomac
River. A similar murder and disappearance occured somewhere in this
same general timeframe on or near the Georgetown campus.
While someone already imprisoned for another crime is generally asserted
to be the prime suspect in the Chandra Levi disappearance -- due to his
arrest for assault/attempted-***ual-assualt with an MO of jumping out of
the woods -- there's still no sufficient explanation as to how Chandra's
remains wound up where they did at an area which isn't directly
accessible from motor vehicle but which is far less accessible to anyone
trying to do a long-distance muscle-power trans****t of a human body. But
to someone with a motor vehicle, a nearby riding stable would allow
parking and a short-haul carry of a body would be possible to an average
sized man in decent health. Yet the person to whom Chandra's
disappearance is attributed was a smallish man in somewhat debilitated
condition, whose area of operations and residence was rather farther
south in the park than Chanda's remains. Others who remain unconvinced
that this person presently in prison was responsible for Chandra do
theorize that Chandra met someone "last minute" that she knew, and
probably took a ride with them in some sort of motor vehicle, which
obviously isn't publicly known or certain. But that would explain how
she got to her final resting place in the Park. One might wonder, if,
perhaps, someone did see her in a car and may have even correctly
remembered the tags, which might have on-inquiry turned up as re****ted
stolen, but actually sitting in Fawley's collection.
That Fawley was at least marginally familiar with Wa****ngton DC is
evidenced by photos at
http://photobucket.com/albums/v466/skulz/public_trans****tation/
which has photos of, among other things, an S4 Metrobus, and several
shots of Metrorail both from inside and outside of the stations. He also
reviews several Goth-friendly clubs and has photos mounted.
A link from the LineNowhere site points first to a page on DC, and then
a link from there goes to a page modified 09/05/2005 and at present the
only information there says "Data will be reposted soon." One wonders if
perhaps the author decided that too many insights might have been
gleaned from any commentary on that page.
Probably this is a total time-waster and wild goose chase, but maybe
Fawley's whereabouts -- if traceable -- at times associated with various
disappearances in cities within 120 or so miles of Richmond, could lead
to some other interesting things.
--
The incapacity of a weak and distracted government may
often assume the appearance, and produce the effects,
of a treasonable correspondence with the public enemy.
--Gibbon, "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire"


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